ABACUS Counselling Training & Supervision Ltd
ABACUS Counselling Training & Supervision Ltd
We will cover: • Overview of CBT • Inter-relation of thoughts, mood and behaviour (and
exercise) • Principles and process of CBT • Cognitive Distortions/restructuring • Tools of CBT useful for PG treatment • Relapse Prevention
Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) has really only been around about 10-15 years
False – probably started in its modern form in 1950’s with Albert Ellis (Rational Emotive Behaviour Therapy) and 1960’s with Aaron Beck (Cognitive Therapy)
CBT is largely a set of techniques False – Involves biological, psychological and social factors
CBT says that most beliefs we have are not conscious, but habitual or automatic and based upon personal ‘rules’ that sometimes are not realistic
True CBT is educative and collaborative and often has homework
True
CBT says that what we think determines how we feel True
CBT says irrational beliefs can distort reality, result in illogical evaluations (of self, others and the world), and may cause widespread harm (stop achieving goals, distressing emotional surges, harmful behaviours)
True CBT focuses upon positive thinking
False – not all negative emotions are wrong, and not all positive emotions are functional – CBT focuses upon realistic thoughts, emotions and behaviours
CBT is based upon logic and experiment to change irrational belief systems, rather than just changing the symptoms
True
CBT umbrella
REBT Ellis Cognitive
Therapy Beck
Dialectical Behaviour Therapy
Linehan
Community Reinforcement
Approach
Others Thoughts (cognitions) cause feelings and behaviours, not external stimuli – modifying thoughts (by cognitions and behavioural techniques) can improve emotional (feelings) & behaviour problems
Cognitive Therapy
Behaviour caused and controlled by cognitions (thoughts) – a change in cognitions (what we think, or what happens when we think) will result in behaviour change
Cognitive Behavioural Therapy
Cognitions (thoughts) and behaviour are connected and for psychological problems to be solved, therapy must address both cognition and behaviour – 2 different theories
a) Cognitive theory – behaviour controlled by thoughts (plans, strategies, problem-solving, judgement, risk assessment)
b) Behaviour theory – behaviour is acquired , maintained and changed by conditioning and reinforcement
Environment Activating trigger
Eg, Pokies music
Physical feeling
Heart racing
Thoughts
Can be unconscious Pokies!!
Behaviour
eg gambling
Mood or Emotion
eg excitement
• CBT examines the thoughts and beliefs connected to our moods, behaviours, physical experiences and to the events in our lives
• A central aspect is that our perception of an event or experience powerfully influences our emotional, behavioural and physiological responses to it
• CBT teaches you to identify your thoughts, moods, behaviours and physical reactions in small situations
• CBT helps with cognitive, behavioural and physical-sensory responses to internal and external events
• “You then learn to test the meaning and usefulness of various thoughts and…
• Change the thinking patterns that keep you locked into dysfunctional moods, behaviours or relationship interactions...
• CBT enables you to learn how to make changes in your life when your thoughts alert you to potential problems”
Greenberger, D. & Padesky, C.A. (1995)
You got the bus in to work this morning. You have made an arrangement to be picked up after work by your partner at 5.30 pm and are looking forward to going out with them to dinner.
It is now 6.05 pm and there is no sign of them yet. Everyone else has left work and no-one is around the area. You left your mobile phone at home. It is getting cold and it feels like rain.
In your group, write down 3 thoughts you are having and what is the main feeling you have.
Even though it was the same situation, each group had different thoughts and feelings.
• Why was that?
• What are the connections between previous experience, context of the situation, our thoughts about the situation, and our resulting feelings, behaviours and actions?
• How tempting was it to make assumptions?
CBT requires a sound therapeutic alliance:
• Warmth
• Empathy
• Caring
• Genuine regard
• Competence
• Feedback
Sound familiar?
CBT emphasises collaboration and active participation:
– Teamwork
– Leading-partner to partner relationship
– Treatment goals
– Homework
– Agenda setting
CBT involves a consideration of 5 components to any problem:
1. Cognition (thoughts) 2. Mood (emotions) 3. Physiological reactions (e.g., physical
sensations) 4. Behaviour 5. Environment
CBT therapist helps clients become aware of the relationships among the 5 areas:
1. To recognise how certain negative, unhelpful, or unrealistic thoughts can generate distress
2. Seemingly uncontrollable emotions that appear out of proportion to the situation
3. Uncomfortable physical sensations 4. Maladaptive behaviour 5. To understand how social and physical aspects of
the environment can contribute to distress
• Once clients understand these connections, more helpful coping strategies are developed
• 3 main categories of coping strategies:
• Problem solving
• Social skills and support
• Cognitive restructuring
Step 1: develop connection with client with warmth, empathy, respect, provide hope
Step 2: assessment – personal history, other disorders
Step 3: identify goals, motivation, describe CBT and process
Step 4: apply CBT (identify beliefs, exercises, homework, additional skills)
Step 5: evaluate coping skills and ongoing application of coping skills
CBT teaches clients to identify, evaluate, and respond to dysfunctional thoughts & beliefs:
• “What’s going through your mind?”
• Examining the evidence for/against thought
• Socratic questioning
• Collaborative empiricism
• Guided discovery
CBT change process
Functional analysis of behaviour
Establishes skills and
sensitises AOD client to use these when appropriate
AOD client monitors
success and modifies if necessary
Relapse prevention by
identification of risk situations in
advance and managing them – this becomes a
habit
Assist in understanding behaviours &
emotions arise from beliefs &
thoughts
By record keeping,
homework explanation, and therapists help,
irrational beliefs
identified
Taught how to identify,
challenge & alter irrational
beliefs
Action as well as
thoughts – practice especially
during homework
Triggers What sets me up to gamble
My thoughts and feelings before
Gambling What did I
do?
Positive things that
then happened
(after)
Negative things that
then happened
(after) What I was
thinking What I was
feeling
Going home from work on payday
All work & no play -can’t stand this!
Bored Pulled into gambling venue
No longer bored
Lost money I couldn’t afford
Argument with husband
He doesn’t appreciate me
Annoyed Stormed out & drove down to pokies
Chatted with friends playing and staff
Felt guilty and lost too much
Goals List (interventions are linked to
client’s goals)
What could get in the way-
barriers
What I can do to remove barriers
Who could help and
support me
Stop gambling
Limit cash
Take up bowls again
Going to pub & club alone
Having EFTPOS card No bowls, don’t join bowls Club
Don’t go or go with someone who knows I want to stop playing pokies
Cancel card – take someone with me Borrow bowls from Peter, go with Peter and join this week
Peter or Shirley
Shirley
Peter
• All or nothing thinking (black & white thinking) “If I don’t get it 100% right then I’ve failed”
• Over-generalisation “I never get things right - typical!” (signals: ‘never’ & ‘always’)
• Mental filter only seeing what is wrong, ignoring positives “Sure I won but when I slipped over at the end I really made a fool of myself”
• Disqualifying the positive “Yes, I did succeed, but it was a fluke” (positives ‘don’t count because…’)
• Mind reading “He didn’t even acknowledge me, so he must think I’m rubbish”
• Fortune telling – treating future as if already fact – ‘I’ll never be happy!’
• Magnification or minimisation Problems exaggerated, success diminished; ‘Anyone could have done that – I’m nothing special’
• Catastrophising “Although it seems a small thing, I just know it’s the beginning of the end”
• Should statements “I should have known this would happen” (‘shoulds/shouldn’ts’- need to be punished – rules where there are none)
• Maladaptive thoughts “I can’t get the picture of my stuffing up out of my mind” (may be accurate but unhelpful ruminating on it)
• Personalising – assuming without evidence ‘If we fail in this, it’ll definitely be because of me’
• Emotional reasoning – ‘I’m feeling really tense; you must be about to criticise me’; something’s gone wrong, I can just feel it
• Illusions of control • Beliefs that chances of winning greater than chance • In both part skill/chance and fully chance gambling
• Superstitions • Lucky charms • Lucky numbers • Lucky machines/horses • Rituals
• Bias attributions • Under-estimating chance/over-estimating skill • Near misses (thought of as ‘near wins’) • Gamblers fallacy – past controls future – wins ‘due’ – outcomes not
independent (coin tosses) – wins/losses balance over time • Chasing or entrapment
• Losses only able to be recovered through continued gambling
Exercises and interventions
1. Client has a belief that roulette wins average out (quickly) and if several reds win in a row, next more likely to be black – Ask client to describe how many (minimum) reds before they
would bet on a black. Ask if tossing a coin would be the same (eg after 4 heads, the next would be a tails). As homework, ask them to toss the coin and record the next toss after 4 heads or tails. How often was the next coin different? Did it change their belief?
2. Client says they’re unable to handle their excitement (anticipation) and this drives them to gamble – Teach relaxation techniques. Homework: when boredom
stress is high ask them to assign a level out of 10. Then ask them to relax and again estimate out of 10
Event Automatic
thoughts (hot thought-most intense negative
emotion)
Mood 1-10
Evidence that
supports the hot thought
Evidence that doesn’t
support it
Optional or other
thoughts that might
explain
Mood rating now
1-10
• Determine patterns related to gambling • Identify triggers related to gambling • Identify situations/people to avoid and options • Recognise feelings which lead to gambling • Make associations between thoughts, moods and
actions • Create awareness of the multiple consequences of
gambling • Provide increased understanding to help client
make changes they consider important • Provide a record of progress in change
Day Time Place Who with
What used
$ spent
How I felt
before
How I felt
after
Mon 9-5pm 5 -8pm
work Pub
staff Joe @ 1st
none pokies
0 50
Bored (4) Excited (8)
Tired (5) Angry (9)
Tues
Wed 8–1am Club self pokies 100 Lonely (7) Excited (9)
Angry (8) Guilty (9)
Thurs
• Some automatic thoughts are triggers for relapse - therapy can reduce risk
• CBT techniques for relapse prevention include tools for: • Identifying early warning signs • Identifying strategies to counteract • De-construct lapses - learning experience • Identifying high risk situations
High Risk Situations My Strategies
Risky situation Strategy Ideas Supports, Support people
When drinking in the pub and can hear the pokies
Try to plan to have my wife or someone who won’t let me gamble present, Don’t drink too much; don’t take eftpos card Go home early if I feel like gambling
My wife Good friend around who knows I don’t want to gamble
The situation
Prior thoughts, feelings and expectations
What I did e.g. drink,
Play pokies
What else I could have
done
Expected outcome if I
used alternatives
Friday, after work – mates invite me to pub
Had a hard week; Bored and feeling like a break; Didn’t want to sound like under wife’s thumb; I’ll only go for one drink
Drank about 5 glasses of beer, then felt like gambling
Gone out with wife instead; Said I had a family function; Got realistic
Wouldn’t feel bad; Had a good time; Mates would have believed me; No gambling
• Is there a problem? Clues from our body, thoughts, feelings and behaviour (including reactions to others/them to us)
• What is the problem? Describe and break down into parts
• What can I do? Brainstorm solutions – changing the situation and/or where you are
• Select an approach – the most likely one to succeed • Is it working? Assess during process and modify or
change if necessary
When matched to the client’s stage of change, there are a number of relevant strategies and tools that can be used to assist their progress, coming from both MI and CBT (can be used concurrently as opportunity presents)
Our unique internal perspective and thinking:
• generates our self-image (often in spite of other influences and opinions),
• also generates our mood and resulting patterns of behaviour
• affects our own motivation to change them - but all can be positively influenced by good, well timed therapeutic skills in the areas of MI and CBT
• CBT is collaborative, person centred, systematic, and aims to empower people
• CBT is found to be effective in addressing problem gambling
• CBT effective in addressing problem gambling occurring with coexisting mental disorders
• CBT helps prevent relapse • CBT often used with medication but often by itself • Possibly the most evidence-based and used therapy